Greece - a powerful student movement is shaking the right wing government

Greece
is being rocked by the biggest student mobilisations for more than 20 years.
Faculties have been occupied all over the country and the movement is
instinctively turning to the workers for help, calling on the unions to
organise a general strike. Over the last three weeks Greek society has been shaken to
its very foundations by the biggest mobilisation of University students since
1981. Now this movement is at its peak with 345 University Faculties under
occupation. A total of 100,000 students have taken part in the biggest student
assemblies of the last ten years. We have also witnessed massive
demonstrations, the biggest of which took place last Thursday with over 40,000
students marching through the centre of Athens.

The spark that provoked this movement is a new law on the
Universities, which is aimed at transforming the Universities into private
companies with managers. The new law would exclude the students from any say in
matters. Already students are forced to take jobs to finance their studies,
giving them very little time for anything else.

Another important element in sparking off this movement has
been the decision of the New Democracy government to change the Constitution so
as to allow the setting up of private universities. However, although these are
important elements, the real underlying reason for this movement is the
accumulation of pressure on the living standards of the workers and poor
families in Greece,
under constant attack from the government and the Greek bourgeoisie.

This movement is an eloquent answer to all those
petit-bourgeois intellectuals who have characterized the youth as apathetic and
apolitical. The events of the past few weeks have shown how things can move
very quickly. Once the movement took off there was a rapid interest on the part
of the youth in the Universities in politics with a massive turn to the left.

We are faced here with a sudden and sharp turning point. An
important role in this has been that of the police, which has used brutally
oppressive measures with many students being arrested and many injured and
taken to hospital. This has revealed the real nature of the bourgeois state in
the eyes of thousands of young people and has also brought the majority of
society to sympathise with the students.

Initially the leadership of the movement was dominated by
independent left groups and the student wing of the Synaspismos party. Initially
the leadership of the KKE (Communist Party) student front came out against the
movement, but when they found that their own the rank and file was
spontaneously taking part they had to change their position. The PASOK
leadership has not uttered a word of support for the movement. In fact, for
some time its position has been in favour of the creation of private
Universities. The student front of the PASOK in the Universities is now
divided, with some supporting the movement and some not.

Faced with the huge pressure from below, already the
government has been hinting through the bourgeois press that it may withdraw
the law for some months. It is scared of a repetition of the French movement.
Already during the French movement the bourgeois media in Greece was
openly taking about the French contagion. Now it has arrived!

Pressure from the students is growing. They are demanding
that the leading bodies of the GSEE (the Greek TUC) call a general strike in
support of the students. The students instinctively understand that in reality
a general strike is the only way to defeat the government.

On Thursday of this week, a new demonstration has been
called. We believe that it is going to be even bigger than the previous one.
The Marxist tendency in Greece
gathered around the paper "Marxistiki Foni" is intervening actively in the
movement in three areas, Athens,
Chalkida and Komotini. We have also been present on all the big demonstrations
and we are intervening in the assemblies in six Universities Faculties. Our
main emphasis is to pose the question of linking up the student movement with
the working class and the need for a general strike in defence of state
education.